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Album of the weekJubilationThe Band (River North)
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The report of their
demise was
exaggerated indeed.
Here it is, 20 years after
filmmaker Martin
Scorsese's The Last
Waltz celebrated the
Band's retirement, and
the group is still
making enjoyable
country rock. Two
original players are
long gone, of course
(Robbie Robertson by
choice in 1976;
Richard Manuel by
suicide in 1986), but
founders Levon Helm, Garth Hudson and Rick Danko are joined
on this, the group's 10th studio album, by three longtime
bandmates plus guest stars, like Eric Clapton and John Hiatt.
The resulting music has the loosey-goosey, focused but
ramshackle quality of the Band's best work. On the energized
"Last Train to Memphis," Clapton confirms that there is no band
and no song he can't make better, and on "White Cadillac," the
group's elders pay tribute to a former roadmate, singer Ronnie
Hawkins.Despite an occasional lapse into pretentiousness, the
Band has always seemed to have an inordinate amount of fun
with its music. Happily, that is still the case.
-- Ralph Novak Bottom Line: Plenty of life in the old boys yet |
The manpower varies, but not the music for Levon Helm (above) and the Band. |